I. Comparative Sacramental Theology
1. Reformed (Westminster): Spiritual Presence, Covenant Signs
The theology of the sacraments articulated in the Westminster Confession of Faith is often described as highly sacramental without being sacerdotal.
Key features:
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Sacraments are signs and seals of the covenant of grace
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A real spiritual relation exists between sign and thing signified
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Efficacy depends on Christ’s institution and the Spirit’s work, not the moment of administration
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Christ is really present in the Supper, but spiritually, not bodily
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Faith is the instrument of reception
This framework preserves objectivity (God truly gives) without collapsing into automatism or metaphysical speculation.
2. Lutheran Theology: Sacramental Union and Bodily Presence
Classical Lutheran theology, as articulated in the Augsburg Confession, affirms a more robust account of Christ’s bodily presence in the Lord’s Supper.
Key distinctions:
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Christ’s body and blood are truly present “in, with, and under” the bread and wine (often called sacramental union)
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The Supper conveys grace objectively, even to the unworthy (though not savingly)
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The presence is bodily, not merely spiritual, yet without transubstantiation
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Greater emphasis on Christ’s words of institution (“This is my body”)
Lutherans worry that the Reformed view risks thinning the Supper into subjectivity, the Reformed worry that the Lutheran view risks binding Christ’s glorified body too closely to earthly elements.
Despite this difference, both reject transubstantiation and affirm that the Supper is far more than remembrance.
3. Anglican Theology: Deliberate Theological Latitude
Anglican sacramental theology occupies a broad middle space, formally defined by the Thirty-Nine Articles and liturgically shaped by the Book of Common Prayer.
Key characteristics:
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Only two sacraments of the Gospel (Baptism and the Lord’s Supper)
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Rejection of transubstantiation as “repugnant to Scripture”
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Affirmation of real participation in Christ, without dogmatic precision on how
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Strong emphasis on reverent reception, repentance, and faith
Historically, Anglicanism has housed:
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Reformed-leaning interpretations (especially among Puritans and evangelicals)
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High Church or Anglo-Catholic views, approaching Roman Catholic realism
In this sense, Anglican theology is intentionally less confessional and more liturgical, allowing sacramental unity amid theological diversity.
II. How Chapters 27–29 Shaped Reformed Worship and Pastoral Practice
1. Word-Centered Worship
Westminster’s sacramental theology ensured that preaching remained central. The sacraments were never sidelined, but they were always:
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Interpreted by the Word
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Guarded from ritualism
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Integrated into covenantal proclamation
This produced a worship pattern in which:
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The sermon explains the gospel
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The sacraments visibly confirm the same gospel
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Christ speaks first; the church responds
2. Pastoral Oversight and “Fencing the Table”
One of the most distinctive historical consequences was the practice of fencing the Lord’s Table.
Rooted in Chapter 29, this involved:
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Catechetical preparation for communicants
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Self-examination encouraged from the pulpit
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Church discipline exercised pastorally, not punitively
The goal was not exclusion, but protection of souls and reverence for Christ’s ordinance. This practice profoundly shaped Reformed pastoral identity: ministers were not ritual technicians, but watchmen of the covenant.
3. Catechesis and Covenant Formation
Because baptism was understood as covenantal rather than magical, Reformed churches invested heavily in:
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Catechisms (Shorter and Larger)
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Household instruction
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Public profession of faith
Baptism marked the beginning of a long pastoral journey, not the end of one. This produced generations of Christians formed by teaching, discipline, and communal responsibility.
4. Frequency and Reverence of Communion
Historically, many Reformed churches practiced less frequent communion (monthly or quarterly), not from indifference, but from fear of trivialization.
While this has been debated and often revised in modern practice, the original impulse was pastoral:
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The Supper should never be routine
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Preparation mattered
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Reverence guarded joy
Even where frequency increased, the Westminster framework ensured that depth was never sacrificed for immediacy.
III. A Final Integrative Observation
What distinguishes the Westminster vision is not austerity, but theological restraint in service of pastoral care.
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Against Rome: it denies a sacrificing priesthood
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Against Zwinglianism: it denies mere symbolism
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Against Lutheranism: it denies bodily localization
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Against enthusiasm: it denies private administration
Yet it affirms—quietly but firmly—that Christ truly gives Himself to His people through outward means He Himself appointed.
In that sense, Chapters 27–29 are not merely doctrinal guardrails; they are a pastoral theology of assurance, teaching believers to trust not their experience, but God’s promise—spoken, seen, and sealed.